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Solomon Islands - History |
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Meanwhile, the Spanish in Peru were starting to look around for new lands. In 1597, Don Alvaro de Mendaña y Neyra took off in search of the legendary southern islands or, perhaps, continent. In 1568 his expedition sighted a large island, calling it Santa Isabel, then proceeded to navigate the nearby landforms giving them Spanish names that remain to this day. After six months of conflict with islanders over gold and food, the Spanish headed home. Mendaña described the islands, which he called the Western Islands, in glowing terms. By 1570 they were being referred to as Yslas de Salomon, in reference to the biblical king Solomon, and the name stuck. Though keen to return, Mendaña couldn't raise the funds until 1595, when he set off on an ill-fated attempt to set up a colony. After only two months on Santa Cruz the expedition limped back to Peru, minus Mendaña, who had succumbed to malaria. Ten years later, Mendaña's chief pilot decided to again repeat the mistakes of history. His failure signalled the end of Spanish interest in the western Pacific.
In the last decade of the 19th century, Britain did land deals with Germany and gained control of the island group, calling it the British Solomon Islands Protectorate. The first resident commissioner, Charles Woodford, took charge from 1896 to 1915. He was an enlightened chap - he never carried a gun - and is credited with planting the seeds of organised government in the Solomon's. In April 1942 the Japanese took the Shortland Islands and then moved to Tulagi. Their treatment of the locals was less than perfect, and when they began building an airfield on Guadalcanal, the Allies took immediate action. Large-scale US landing occurred in August 1942, but the Japanese surprised the Allies and inflicted one of the heaviest defeats in US naval history in the Battle of Savo. For six months the Allies held Guadalcanal and daytime supremacy, while the Japanese launched night raids and shipped in reinforcements. The US gained the upper hand and slowly began regaining the islands - one by one. Provoked as much by Japanese misconduct as by British orders, the islanders remained loyal to the Allies throughout the conflict. After the Japanese surrender in 1945, many islanders - mostly Malaitans - worked at the huge US base on Guadalcanal. It was here - being treated as friends and equals by the US army - that the locals saw that British ruling-class behaviour could do with an overhaul. After the war, a nationalist, pro-American movement sprang up in Malaita, opposing the continuance of British rule. Mass arrests in 1947 and 1948 curbed the movement's potency, and it died out when the US withdrew in 1950. Britain saw the post-colonial writing on the wall, however, and introduced local government, regional assemblies and, finally, an elected governing council in 1970.
Since early 1999, the Isatabus, natives of Guadalcanal, have expelled more than 20,000 Malaitans from the island. The Malaitans had migrated from nearby Malaita, and many secured jobs in the capital, Honiara, stirring resentment among Isatabus that has grown steadily since independence. Ethnic tensions reached their height in June 2000, when the Malaita Eagle Force, stole police weapons, forced Prime Minister Bartholomew Ulufa'alu to resign, and seized control of Honiara. The rival groups agreed to a ceasefire in June 2000, barely averting a civil war. Legislators elected opposition leader Mannasseh Sogavare prime minister on June 30, 2000 |
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